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  • Director DAVID LYNCH, who Mel brooks called "Jimmy Stewart from Mars." LYNCH is the director of "Eraserhead," "The Elephant Man," "Dune" and "Blue Velvet," all of which have received critical acclaim and attained cult status. He is also the creator of the popular but short-lived TV series, "Twin Peaks." LYNCH has published a book of photographs of his movies and his art, called "Images" (Hyperion).
  • Commentator Maureen Corrigan reviews "Bucket Nut" (Doubleday), a new crime novel by Liza Cody.
  • Jazz critic Kevin Whitehead reviews trumpeter Eddie Allen''s (aka E.J. Allen) new album, "Another''s Point of View."
  • 2: Walter Winchell was the man who legitimized gossip columns, tabloid news, and celebrity watching. He rose from a poor New York family to become one of the most read columnists, and eventually consulted with F.D.R. and Joe McCarthy. Writer NEAL GABLER has written a biography about Winchell. "Winchell: Gossip, Power, and the Culture of Celebrity" (Alfred A. Knopf Inc.) helps explain the man who was the source of our current celebrity-obsessed culture.
  • Musicians ANN RABSON, GAYE ADEGBALOLA and ANDREA FAYE McINTOSH, who make up the blues group Saffire - The Uppity Blues Women. The "Chicago Tribune" says "these women have in abundance," in their songs about "domestic violence, self-respect and being a woman." Their fourth album is "Old, New, Borrowed & Blue" (Alligator Records). The group says the album was named because "We embrace the old. . . we celebrate the new. . . We've begged, stolen, and borrowed a variety of songs, rhythms, licks and tricks."
  • CHRISTOPHER JOYCE. He has just written a book, "Earthly Goods" (Little, Brown and Company)" about searching for medicinal plants in rainforests. CHRISTOPHER JOYCE will talk about the history of seeking drugs in the rainforests, and the recent attempt of pharmaceutical companies, medical researchers, and anthropoligists, to preserve the rainforests and comb them for AIDS, alzheimers and diabetes cures. JOYCE is also the founder and editor of the U.S. bureau of "New Scientist" magazine, and is currently a reporter and editor for National Public Radio
  • Singer, Songwriter, guitarist FREEDY JOHNSTON. (yes, it's "Freedy") He has five albums to his credit. His latest album is called "This Perfect World." His previous albums have garnered him much acclaim among music critics. One critic wrote, "the strongest album by a new male singer-songwriter in at least a decade." What's he sound like? His songs have been described as "post-punk honky-tonk. . . performed by a lonely, heartbroken wiseass." (Rebroadcast. Originally aired 6/
  • 2: FRED "CHICO" LAGER, former CEO of the Ben & Jerry's ice cream company. He joined the company in 1982, and together with Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield, built the company from a small ice cream parlor to a $100 million publicly held company. LAGER just wrote a book, "Ben & Jerry's: The Inside Scoop (Crown Publishers, Inc.)," about his experiences building a successful business while upholding Ben and Jerry's original philosophy of business as a catalyst for social change.
  • 2: Terry talks with character actor STANLEY TUCCI. In the new movie, "Undercover Blues," TUCCI plays an hilariously incompetent, yet vicious mugger named "Muerte." (MWARE-tay). He's also appeared in the movies "Prelude to a Kiss," "Beethoven" and "Billy Bathgate." TUCCI's well-known for his role as crime boss Ricky Penzola in the tv series, Wiseguy" and has also appeared on television in "Equal Justice," "Thirtysomething," and "The Equalizer."
  • Bosnian Journalist ZLATO DIZDAREVIC, (pronounced: ZLOTKO DIZ DAR A VICH) an editor of the only daily newspaper in Sarajevo which has continued to publish during the war, and the author of "Sarajevo Under Seige: A War Journal," (Fromm International). He read last night at the PEN American Center's benefit, "An Evening For Sarajevo"
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